Miami (Ohio)-Ohio St. Preview

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- On the day he was introduced as Ohio State's 24th head coach last November, Urban Meyer outlined a relatively simple list of expectations for his players, his staff and himself.

"I want a bunch of coaches that coach like their hair's on fire, and I want a football team that goes four to six seconds of relentless effort," he said. "You do that, you have a chance to win in every game you play."

Meyer, winner of two national championships at Florida, returned from a one-year coaching hiatus as an ESPN analyst to take over an Ohio State program mired in NCAA sanctions and beaten down by a year of negative headlines.

So far, he's injected some fresh thinking, a new offensive philosophy and renewed intensity into a program which had been consistently good in a decade under Jim Tressel, before he was bumped off his pedestal for covering up a scheme involving several top players trading memorabilia for tattoos and money.

Among several other NCAA penalties, the No. 18 Buckeyes are banned from going to a bowl after this season. So, with Meyer preaching he wants an "angry" team, they've taken it to heart by vowing to run the table and obliterate all the bad publicity from a year of suspensions, violations and sanctions.

"Our goal's to go 12-0," running back Carlos Hyde said. "Even though we can't go to a bowl game, we still have to play. So we're just going to get out there and have a chip on our shoulders since we can't go to a bowl game -- to let the world know who the Buckeyes are this year."

They can start doing so Saturday when they open the season by hosting Miami of Ohio.

Meyer took over an Ohio State team coming off a dreadful 6-7 season that included a four-game losing skid entering this season. Luke Fickell, the interim coach then, was retained as a defensive co-coordinator.

The attitude was bad, someone was suspended for a violation almost every week and it seemed everyone was waiting for the NCAA to hand down the penalties that came just before the Buckeyes lost to Meyer's former employer, Florida, in the Gator Bowl.

"There was a lot of (NCAA and disciplinary) stuff going on last year. You can't really point out what it was," cornerback Bradley Roby said. "There was so much stuff going on, I feel like it really affected everybody."

Meyer has told his players to forget 2011 and concentrate on turning around the program. But he doesn't have three multiyear starters on the offensive line, the top running back and best linebacker from a team whose seven losses were the most for an Ohio State team since 1897.

He has, though, instilled a lot of energy and optimism.

"Expectations always are high," said the focal point of Meyer's vaunted spread attack, second-year quarterback Braxton Miller. "When I was in high school looking at Ohio State, I was like, `Man, they aren't ever going to lose. They're always going to be good.' That's the expectations of the fans."

Miller and the new offense are a radical change from the days of Tressel, who once famously called the punt "the most important play in football." Meyer would prefer not to punt at all.

His Buckeyes will play uptempo, throw the ball a lot to a lot of different receivers, and should prevent fans from leaving their seats for a bathroom break for fear they'll miss a 70-yard pass play -- or maybe a turnover.

Jordan Hall would have been the H back in the offense, the guy around whom most plays revolve. But he's out for the first couple of games after cutting a tendon while walking barefoot outside his apartment this summer. In his stead, Hyde, freshman Bri'onte Dunn (who sidestepped legal problems this summer) and Rod Smith also figure to be playmakers.

"I feel that everybody has bought into coach Meyer," said Shazier, a promising sophomore who sports a shaved head. "With everybody adjusting to it, I think we're going to have a really good season."

Meyer, who twice quit the Florida job due to stress, health and family considerations, swears that he's feeling reinvigorated and taking steps to make sure he doesn't burn out again.

His first Ohio State schedule won't cause him any heartburn. The Buckeyes play their first four games at home against the likes of Miami of Ohio, Central Florida, California and UAB, and in a down year for the Big Ten almost every conference game is winnable. The toughest will be at Michigan State on Sept. 29, Nebraska at home a week later, and the 1-2 punch to close the regular season, at two-time defending champ Wisconsin and home against archrival Michigan.

Then ... the season ends. With no bowl game, Meyer and his team will have to be content with whatever they can accomplish in 12 games.

Meyer has no idea how everyone, including himself, will handle the abrupt end of the season.

"We've never not played for a championship in November," he said. "Ten years as a head coach, every November we were playing for a championship. Do we have to create our own championship? I don't know. We'll see how it goes."

The first challenge for Meyer's defense will come in the form of RedHawks senior Zac Dysert, who's third among active quarterbacks with 8,530 passing yards behind Oklahoma's Landry Jones and USC's Matt Barkley. Dysert threw for 3,513 yards with 23 touchdowns and 11 interceptions last year.

He closed the season with passing performances of 364, 413 and 372 yards, but Miami of Ohio dropped all three games to finish 4-8 as it regressed from a 10-4 effort in 2010. Dysert, sacked 46 times last season -- second most in the nation -- will try to stay upright long enough to get the ball to Nick Harwell, who was fifth in the FBS with 1,425 receiving yards and fourth with 129.5 per game.

Ohio State has won each of the four matchups, all played at Columbus. The teams haven't met since 2005.

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The Buckeyes have not lost to an in-state school since 1921 (Oberlin), and no Ohio State coach has lost his debut since Jack Ryder in 1892. All of which seems to bode well for Urban Meyer's first game in the Horseshoe and what Ohio State fans hope is the beginning to a special era.